Prien Annika, Feddermann-Demont Nina, Verhagen Evert, Twisk Jos, Junge Astrid
Fakultät Humanwissenschaften, MSH Medical School Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.
Amsterdam Collaboration on Health & Safety in Sports, Public and Occupational Health, Amsterdam UMC Locatie VUmc, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
BMJ Open Sport Exerc Med. 2020 Dec 3;6(1):e000952. doi: 10.1136/bmjsem-2020-000952. eCollection 2020.
Adverse long-term effects of playing football due to repetitive head impact exposure on neurocognition and mental health are controversial. To date, no studies have evaluated such effects in women.
To (1) compare neurocognitive performance, cognitive symptoms and mental health in retired elite female football players (FB) with retired elite female non-contact sport athletes (CON), and to (2) assess whether findings are related to history of concussion and/or heading exposure in FB.
Neurocognitive performance, mental health and cognitive symptoms were assessed using computerised tests (CNS-vital signs), paper pen tests (Category fluency, Trail-Making Test, Digit Span, Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test), questionnaires (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, SF-36v2 Health Survey) and a symptom checklist. Heading exposure and concussion history were self-reported in an online survey and in a clinical interview, respectively. Linear regression was used to analyse the effect of football, concussion and heading exposure on outcomes adjusted for confounders.
FB (n=66) performed similar to CON (n=45) on neurocognitive tests, except for significantly lower scores on verbal memory (mean difference (MD)=-7.038, 95% CI -12.98 to -0.08, p=0.038) and verbal fluency tests (MD=-7.534, 95% CI -13.75 to -0.46, p=0.016). Among FB weaker verbal fluency performance was significantly associated with ≥2 concussions (MD=-10.36, 95% CI -18.48 to -2.83, p=0.017), and weaker verbal memory performance with frequent heading (MD=-9.166, 95% CI -17.59 to -0.123, p=0.041). The depression score differed significantly between study populations, and was significantly associated with frequent heading but not with history of concussion in FB.
Further studies should investigate the clinical relevance of our findings and whether the observed associations point to a causal link between repetitive head impacts and verbal memory/fluency or mental health.
由于重复性头部撞击暴露,踢足球对神经认知和心理健康产生的长期不良影响存在争议。迄今为止,尚无研究评估女性中的此类影响。
(1)比较退役精英女性足球运动员(FB)与退役精英女性非接触性运动运动员(CON)的神经认知表现、认知症状和心理健康状况;(2)评估研究结果是否与FB的脑震荡史和/或头球暴露史相关。
使用计算机化测试(CNS生命体征)、纸笔测试(类别流畅性、连线测验、数字广度、听觉连续加法测验)、问卷(医院焦虑抑郁量表、SF-36v2健康调查)和症状清单评估神经认知表现、心理健康和认知症状。头球暴露和脑震荡史分别通过在线调查和临床访谈进行自我报告。使用线性回归分析足球、脑震荡和头球暴露对经混杂因素调整后的结局的影响。
在神经认知测试中,FB组(n = 66)的表现与CON组(n = 45)相似,但言语记忆测试得分显著更低(平均差(MD)=-7.038,95%可信区间-12.98至-0.08,p = 0.038),言语流畅性测试得分也显著更低(MD = -7.534,95%可信区间-13.75至-0.46,p = 0.016)。在FB组中,言语流畅性表现较差与≥2次脑震荡显著相关(MD = -10.36,95%可信区间-18.48至-2.83,p = 0.017),言语记忆表现较差与频繁头球相关(MD = -9.166,95%可信区间-17.59至-0.123,p = 0.041)。研究人群之间的抑郁评分存在显著差异,且在FB组中与频繁头球显著相关,但与脑震荡史无关。
进一步的研究应调查我们研究结果的临床相关性,以及观察到的关联是否表明重复性头部撞击与言语记忆/流畅性或心理健康之间存在因果联系。